The two part definition of a
Christian developed in chapter 6 can be put to the test; however, such a test
is not trivial. Measuring belief and practice is complex and thus the caution
of Jesus Christ to “Judge not according to the appearance” (John 7:24). Chapter
7 doesn’t seek to judge, but rather to measure how well various Christian
denominations are performing in inspiring their members to be strong Believing
and Practicing Christians.
To achieve an accurate
measurement of effectiveness Shuster
analyzes data from three robust landmark quantitative studies conducted in the
United States from 2000 to 2008—one from the Barna Group and two from the
National Survey of Youth and Religion (NSYR). All three studies are highly
respected and widely sourced in the public domain for religiosity across a
large number of behavioral attributes.
Because of alignment issues with
the three studies it was necessary to select 12 common attributes from all
three. There are four attributes relating to belief (belief in Jesus Christ,
God, the importance of faith and the reality of evil) and eight attributes
relating to practice (praying, reading the Bible, attending church, attending
Sunday School, attending small group activities, volunteering, sharing the
gospel and tithing). The Barna study covered adults and the two NSYR studies
covered youth and young adults allowing for sound coverage of the full spectrum
of denominational adherents. To simplify the analysis the vast number of
Christian denominations is consolidated into five categories using the REKTRAD method: Conservative Protestants, Mainline
Protestants, Black Protestants, Roman Catholics and Mormons (LDS).
This unprecedented exercise has
its limitations due to the variation of faith traditions between denominations,
the comparability of attributes between studies and the accuracy of applying a
quantitative measurement to something that is inherently qualitative.
Nonetheless the results were extremely informative:
·
There
are more Believing Christians than Practicing Christians across all
denominations
·
There
is a decrease of belief and practice with age (Mormons being the exception)
·
Conservative
Protestants generally performed well across all 12 attributes
·
Mainline
Protestants tend to reflect the mainstream of the Christian population (the
average)
·
Catholics
lag behind all denominations in belief and practice across all age categories
·
Mormons
recorded the highest composite scores among all Christian denominations
·
Lots
of other surprises and a few jaw droppers
Looking ahead, chapter 13 includes
an exclusive exercise a Christian can take that will categorize that Christian
into one of five types covered in Section 3 of the book (go to www.findyourchristianity.com to take the survey). Perhaps
instead of asking someone “are you Christian,” the more relevant question might
be “how strong of a Christian are you?” or “what type of a Christian are you?”
Next we will study the critics who desire to make this more complicated for
their own benefit.
Go to www.findyourchristianity.com to watch the book trailer, find
out what type of Christian you are, and to order the book
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